Italian Liberal Party (historical)

This MedLibrary.org supplementary page on Italian Liberal Party (historical) is provided directly from the open source Wikipedia as a service to our readers. Please see the note below on authorship of this content, as well as the Wikipedia usage guidelines. To search for other content from our encyclopedia supplement, please use the form below:

Italian Liberal Party
Founded 1861
Dissolved 6 February 1994
Main leaders Benedetto Croce, Bruno Villabruna, Gaetano Martino, Giovanni Malagodi, Valerio Zanone, Alfredo Biondi, Renato Altissimo, Raffaele Costa
Newspaper L'Opinione
Membership (1958) 173,722 (max)1
Ideology Liberalism, Conservatism, Conservative liberalism
International Liberal International
European party European Liberal Democrat and Reform Party
European Parliament Group European Liberal Democrat and Reform Party

The Italian Liberal Party (Partito Liberale Italiano, PLI) was a liberal Italian political party.

Contents

History

Origins

See also: Liberalism and radicalism in Italy

The original Italian Liberal Party was formed as a parliamentary group by Cammillo Benso di Cavour following the Revolutions of 1848 in the Italian states. The party was moderately conservative and supported centralized government, restricted suffrage, regressive taxation, and free trade. The party dominated Italian politics following Italian unification in 1861 but faded after World War I.2 In the 1870s it split into two factions, the Liberal Conservatives (Liberal-Conservatori) led by Antonio di Rudinì and then Sidney Sonnino, and the Liberal Left (Sinistra Liberale) of Giuseppe Zanardelli and Giovanni Giolitti. The second group was by far the largest of the two and dominated Italian politics in the 1900s and 1910s. The Italian Liberal Party was re-united and organized in 1922, under the leadership of Giolitti, but was banned under Benito Mussolini in 1926.

Post World War II

The party was re-founded in 1943 by Benedetto Croce, a prominent intellectual and MP whose international recognition allowed him to remain a free man during Fascism, despite being an anti-fascist himself. Various groups had claimed the label "Liberal" before, but had never organized themselves as a party. After the end of World War II, the Liberal Enrico De Nicola became "temporary chief of state" (not President of the Republic, as the general elections had not yet been held) and another one, Luigi Einaudi (who, as Minister of Economy and Governor of the Bank of Italy between 1945 and 1948, had reshaped Italian economy), first President of Italy.

The first electoral result of the PLI (as National Democratic Union), was 6.8% in the 1946 election for the Constituent Assembly, which was somewhat below expectations. Indeed PLI was supported by all the survivors of the Italian political class before the rise of Fascism, from Vittorio Emanuele Orlando to Francesco Saverio Nitti. In the first years, the party was led by Leone Cattani, member of the internal left, and then by Roberto Lucifero, a monarchist-conservative. This fact caused the exit of the group of Cattani, so that Bruno Villabruna, a moderate, was elected secretary in 1948 in order to re-unite all Liberals under a single banner.

Giovanni Malagodi

Under Giovanni Malagodi, the party moved further to the right on economic issues. In particular the party opposed the new Centre-Left Coalition and presented itself as the main conservative party in Italy. This caused in 1956 the exit of left-wing liberals (among whom Eugenio Scalfari and Marco Pannella) who founded the Radical Party of Liberals and Democrats, later shortened in Radical Party.

Malagodi managed initially to draw some votes from the Italian Social Movement, attracting their hostility, and managing to substantially increase the party's support to a historical record of 7.0% in the 1963 election. After his resignation from party leadership in 1972, the Liberals were defeated with a humiliating 1.3% in the 1976.

The years of Pentapartito

After Valerio Zanone took over in 1976, the party moved to the centre. The new secretary opened to the Socialists, hoping to put in action a sort of Lib-Lab cooperation, similar to that experimented in the United Kingdom from 1977 to 1979 between Labour and Liberals.

In 1983 the PLI finally entered in the government coalition with the Christian Democracy (DC), the Socialist Party (PSI), and the smaller Italian Democratic Socialist Party (PSDI) and Italian Republican Party (PRI); the coalition was dubbed for a long time pentapartito, or "five-parties". In the 1980s, the party was also led by Renato Altissimo and Alfredo Biondi, then Minister of Justice in the first Berlusconi Government and president of Forza Italia's National Council.

Decline, disbandament and diaspora

With the uncovering of the corruption system nicknamed Tangentopoli by the Mani Pulite investigation, many government parties experienced a rapid loss of their support. In the first months, the Liberal Party seemed immune to investigation. However, as the investigations further unraveled, PLI turned out to be part of the corruption scheme. A Liberal, Minister of Health Francesco De Lorenzo, was one of the most loathed politicians in Italy for his corruption, that involved stealing funds from the sick, and allowing commercialisation of medicines based on bribes. De Lorenzo later pretended to have a nervous breakdown to be released from jail, appearing in court dirty and unshaved; a short time after he was granted parole on medical grounds, he was photographed shaved, clean and smiling at a restaurant (ironically named The Two Thieves). It was later found he had used his brief time out of jail to burn a large quantity of documents that could have been used as evidence against him in court.

The party was disbanded in February 1994 and there were at least successor parties:

After some years from the party disbanding, most members migrated to Forza Italia or other parties in the centre-right (e.g., Alfredo Biondi, Raffaele Costa, Antonio Martino and Giancarlo Galan, members of FI, Enzo Savarese, member of National Alliance, and Manuela Dal Lago, member of Northern League), while some other joined the centre-left (e.g., Valerio Zanone, Federico Orlando, Beatrice Rangoni Machivelli and Cinzia Dato, members of Democracy is Freedom - Daisy, Gianfranco Passalacqua, Paolo Colla, Raffaello Morelli and Enzo Marzo, members of Federation of Italian Liberals and of Democrats of the Left).

Re-foundation of the party

In 2004 the party was re-founded by Stefano De Luca (the new national secretary, who was MEP for Forza Italia from 1994 to 1999 and leader of the Liberal Party from 2001 to 2004), Renato Altissimo, Carla Martino (sister of Antonio, minister of Defence, and new president of the party), Giuseppe Basini, Attilio Bastianini, Savino Melillo, Salvatore Grillo, Arturo Diaconale, Gian Nicola Amoretti. This new party gathers some of the Italian right-wing liberals. See Italian Liberal Party (current).

Popular support

The Liberals never gained large support after World War II. In the first election after the war, they gained 6.8% as part of the National Democratic Union. During the Republic, they had their best results in the 1960s (7.0% in 1963 and 5.8% 1963), when they were rewarded by liberal-conservative voters for their opposition to the participation of the Italian Socialist Party to the government. After that they suffered a decline in term of votes and settled around 2-3% in the 1980s.

The party was particularly strong in Piedmont, especially in the Provinces of Torino and Cuneo, where many leading liberal politicians of the Kingdom of Sardinia and the Kingdom of Italy (including both Camillo Cavour and Giovanni Giolitti) hailed from, and, to a minor extent, in Lombardy, Liguria and Sicily.3 After the fall of the so-called First Republic former Liberals were very influent within Forza Italia in Piedmont, Liguria and, strangely, in Veneto, where Giancarlo Galan became regional President.

Leadership

Secretaries

Presidents

References

 

Historical Italian political parties (active parties: simple version, in 2007)

Communist: Communist Party of Italy, Italian Communist Party, Organisation of Communists of Italy (Marxist-Leninists), Proletarian Unity Party, Proletarian Democracy, Movement of Unitarian Communists
Socialist: Italian Reform Socialist Party, United Socialist Party (1922), Labour Democratic Party, Italian Socialist Party of Proletarian Unity
Social democratic: Italian Socialist Party, Italian Socialist Workers' Party, United Socialist Party (1949), Italian Democratic Socialist Party, Unified Socialist Party, Democratic Party of the Left, Italian Socialists, Democrats of the Left
Green: Green Lists, Rainbow Greens
Social liberal: Action Party, Radical Party, Democratic Alliance, Democratic Union, Movement for Democracy – The Net, The Democrats, European Republicans Movement
Conservative liberal: Italian Liberal Party, Union of the Centre, Liberal Party
Centrist: Patto Segni, Italian Renewal, United Consumers, Southern Democratic Party, Middle-of-the-Road Italy, Democracy is Freedom – The Daisy
Regionalist: Social Democratic Party of South Tyrol, Fronte Marco Polo, Sardinia Project, Sicilian Alliance, Daisy Civic List
Christian democratic: Italian People's Party (1919), Christian Democracy, Italian People's Party (1994), Christian Democratic Centre, United Christian Democrats, Christian Democrats for the Republic, Democratic Union for the Republic, European Democracy
Conservative: Uomo Qualunque Front, Monarchist National Party, People's Monarchist Party, Italian Democratic Party of Monarchist Unity, National Democracy
Fascist and neo-fascist: National Fascist Party, Italian Social Movement–National Right


Leftist coalition: Popular Democratic Front, Alliance of Progressives
Centre-left coalition:The Olive Tree, The Union, Rose in the Fist
Liberal coalition: National Democratic Union, National Bloc, Republicans, Liberals, Reformers
Centrist coalition: Pact for Italy, Pact of Democrats
Centre-right coalition: Pole of Freedoms, Pole of Good Government, House of Freedoms
Conservative coalition: National Bloc of Freedom
Neo-fascist coalition: Social Alternative


Liste civetta: For the Abolition of Scorporo, New Country

Wikipedia content modification information:

  • This page was last modified on 16 November 2008, at 12:25.

Wikipedia Authorship and Review

Wikipedia content provided here is not reviewed directly by MedLibrary.org. Wikipedia content is authored by an open community of volunteers and is not produced by or in any way affiliated with MedLibrary.org.

Wikipedia Usage Guidelines

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article on "Italian Liberal Party (historical)".

The URL for this specific entry is:

All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License. (See Copyrights for details). Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.